Spoiling the story

John Benton  |  Comment
Date posted:  1 Aug 2016
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Spoiling the story

How did your church react to Brexit?

The vote on 23 June to leave the European Union seems to have surprised most people. We voted 52% to 48% to go. The Prime Minister, who had campaigned passionately to stay, stepped down to be replaced by Theresa May. The Labour Party, which had rather languidly encouraged us to stay, went into a leadership civil war. The financial markets swung wildly. I liked the cartoon which summed things up with one person saying to another: ‘Aliens have not landed, Elvis has not been found alive, but everything else has happened!’

Spirit of unity

On the following Sunday our own congregation was predictably divided on the matter, but we got over it. Some had felt that to come out was too much of a financial risk, would give the wrong impression to foreigners among us and might damage missionary links with Europe. Others, especially the older ones, wanted out because they were worried by the pace of immigration and what they saw as a lack of democracy at the heart of the EU. I think the veiled threats of some EU leaders about how they would treat us if we left backfired and actually worked to the advantage of the Leave Campaign. Saying ‘Stay in this marriage or else!’ is so wrong at so many levels. But despite different views among God’s people, no one fell out. Ultimately of course, we have something more important to unite us. We are privileged to be part of a much bigger kingdom under the benign government of our loving heavenly Father who holds all the political ups and downs of our world in his hands.

It’s a spirit of unity which post-Brexit Britain needs too. But once the result was known those who had voted to leave took quite a hammering from the media elite. The vote seemed to get under their skin in an extraordinary way. More generally, there was even an angry protest march through London on the first weekend of July. This attracted many thousands and called for another referendum, because those who had voted Leave were obviously senile or off their heads.

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